Publisher's Hardcover ©2018 | -- |
Human-animal relationships. Juvenile fiction.
Urban animals. Juvenile fiction.
Animal behavior. Juvenile fiction.
City and town life. Juvenile fiction.
Human-animal relationships. Fiction.
Urban animals. Fiction.
Animals. Habits and behavior. Fiction.
City and town life. Fiction.
In contrast to the neighborhood settings of Tales from Outer Suburbia (2009), this collection of 25 illustrated poems and stories explores the dynamics between animals and humans amid breathtakingly imaginative scenes in skyscrapers and gutters.Evocative openings compel continued reading: "One afternoon the members of the board all turned into frogs." Exploiting the double meaning of the titular "inner," Tan's (TheSinging Bones, 2016, etc.) ideas are dressed in elegant language that creates the particular within cosmic constructs varying in length, voice, and mood. A horror story about a monster shark finally thwarted—only to keep reproducing—is less terrifying in the first-person plural. The intimate second-person transforms the reader into a toddler communing with wondrous spirit horses in a car's back seat. His consistent ability to delight the mind with fresh theater yields both provocation and restoration. When dead waterways bring about fishing in sky currents, an elusive catch leads a group of boys to experience the relationship between quick decay and fleeting value; yet, as the discovered roe are released heavenward, "here it was, the third great gift of the moonfish: an upward shower of golden sparks, a benediction of transcendental caviar, and remorse." The paintings within or concluding each tale are characterized by layers of glorious color, shadowy corners, dazzling luminosity, surreal situations, and ethereal beauty. They invite lingering, wondering: Ultimately, who will have the last word—or is there another question?Read and reread slowly, savoring every nugget. (Fiction. 12-adult)
School Library Journal Starred Review (Mon Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)Gr 7 Up-As with most of Tan's books, this wonderfully eclectic and insightful follow-up to Tales of Outer Suburbia defies categorization. It is at once an art book, a collection of short stories, and an allegorical treatise on modern urban life, using various wild and domestic animals and their relationships with humankind as their focal point. The book opens with a spread of 25 silhouettes of various creatures highlighted within. The individual selections range from a couple of paragraphs to 10 pages or so, and each includes at least one glorious, two-page painting. The captivating stories are by turns smart, funny, tragic, wry, and often wise, if a bit trippy. Whether it's frogs in a board room, rhinos on the freeway, bears heavily lawyered-up for days in court, or orcas in the sky, these seemingly surreal scenarios allow readers to explore the behaviors of humankind and speculate about its possible future in the grand scheme of things. The 7 x 9inch hardcover trim size may limit the audience of middle schoolers, but this is a volume to hold onto, dip into, reflect on, and interact with, providing limitless writing, art, and discussion prompts. VERDICT This is a thoughtful and inviting examination of some big questions, without professing to have all the answers. A distinctive artistic achievement that will be welcome in most libraries. Luann Toth, School Library Journal
ALA Booklist (Sat Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)Our relationships with animals have always been complicated, becoming more so as our landscape is increasingly urban. In Tan's hands, the city is a place where the wondrous and mundane lives of animals and humans collide, exposing all our flaws and potential and how deeply animals and nature affect us. Initially, these stories seem born of magic and whimsy, but they are deeply rooted in reality: a mother orca grieves for her calf after it is placed in the sky; the last rhino inconveniences drivers as it wanders onto a busy freeway; and an energetic fox paws through both your house and your dreams. While the stories are unexpected and thought-provoking, the illustrations are what really make this book shine. Painted in oil and acrylic on canvas, they are arrestingly luminous. Glowing cityscapes and empty streets create dreamlike backdrops for unexpected juxtapositions that range from serene to unsettling, conveying a sense of wonder, danger, and loss. Beautiful and strange, this collection is unique in both vision and execution.
Horn Book (Mon Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)With these twenty-five works of beguiling short fiction set in other realities, Tan explores the tenuous relationship between humans and animals within urban landscapes. Most stories are three to five pages of evocative prose capped by an illustration in Tan's uniquely earthy and luminescent color palette. The connotations behind individual tales range from fairly overt to rather oblique; regardless, Tan's painterly illustrations consistently enhance each narrative.
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)In contrast to the neighborhood settings of Tales from Outer Suburbia (2009), this collection of 25 illustrated poems and stories explores the dynamics between animals and humans amid breathtakingly imaginative scenes in skyscrapers and gutters.Evocative openings compel continued reading: "One afternoon the members of the board all turned into frogs." Exploiting the double meaning of the titular "inner," Tan's (TheSinging Bones, 2016, etc.) ideas are dressed in elegant language that creates the particular within cosmic constructs varying in length, voice, and mood. A horror story about a monster shark finally thwarted—only to keep reproducing—is less terrifying in the first-person plural. The intimate second-person transforms the reader into a toddler communing with wondrous spirit horses in a car's back seat. His consistent ability to delight the mind with fresh theater yields both provocation and restoration. When dead waterways bring about fishing in sky currents, an elusive catch leads a group of boys to experience the relationship between quick decay and fleeting value; yet, as the discovered roe are released heavenward, "here it was, the third great gift of the moonfish: an upward shower of golden sparks, a benediction of transcendental caviar, and remorse." The paintings within or concluding each tale are characterized by layers of glorious color, shadowy corners, dazzling luminosity, surreal situations, and ethereal beauty. They invite lingering, wondering: Ultimately, who will have the last word—or is there another question?Read and reread slowly, savoring every nugget. (Fiction. 12-adult)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)Like its predecessor,
Starred Review for Kirkus Reviews
School Library Journal Starred Review (Mon Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)
ALA Booklist (Sat Sep 01 00:00:00 CDT 2018)
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book (Mon Apr 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)
Kirkus Reviews (Fri Oct 04 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Wilson's High School Catalog
Wilson's Junior High Catalog
Excerpted from Tales from the Inner City by Shaun Tan
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
The visionary Shaun Tan returns to show us the soul-opening work hes been doing for the past five years.
Tales from the Inner City is a collection of incredibly original stories, rich with feeling, strangely moving, almost numinous. And when the reader comes to the artwork, its like walking into an amazing room, and then throwing open a curtain to see a brilliant scene that makes you understand and appreciate everything youve encountered in a deeper way.